Air India to cut international operations
19/6/2025 6:14
Air India said on Wednesday it will
cut international operations on its widebody aircraft by 15% for
the next few weeks, citing ongoing safety inspections and
operational disruptions following last week's deadly crash of
one of its Boeing 787 Dreamliners.
Authorities continue to investigate the crash of flight
AI171, which killed 241 people and marked the world's deadliest
aviation disaster in a decade.
The airline said in a statement that inspections had been
completed on 26 of its 33 Boeing 787-8 and 787-9 aircraft, and
those 26 have been cleared for service.
The cuts, effective until at least mid-July, were being
implemented "to ensure stability of operations, better
efficiency and minimise inconvenience to passengers," the Tata
Group-owned airline said.
The remaining planes will be checked in the coming days and
additional checks are also planned for its Boeing 777 fleet, Air
India added.
Flight AI171, bound for London's Gatwick Airport, crashed
shortly after takeoff from Ahmedabad, killing all but one on
board and about 30 people on the ground.
Earlier on Wednesday, Air India Chairman N. Chandrasekaran
said the flight that crashed had a clean engine history.
In an interview with Indian broadcaster Times Now,
Chandrasekaran said Air India flight 171's right engine was new
and installed in March 2025, and that the left engine was last
serviced in 2023.
The Dreamliner was fitted with GE Aerospace's GEnx
engines.
Air India also cited geopolitical tensions in the Middle
East and "night curfews in many European and East Asian
airspaces" as contributing factors behind flight cancellations,
which have totaled 83 over the past six days.
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